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May 4, 2013
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energy supplies in the u.s., it won't change american foreign policy. we will be less dependent on oil from the middle east. concern is that china today gets 70% of its energy supplies from the middle east. india is about the same. europe as well. in the global economy is so interlinked that even if the u.s. is not dependent on middle eastern oil, i feel like the instability in the region where the chinese economy and the european economy. so, you know, i think we should step back and do less, but i don't think we can ignore the middle east because it is going to -- turbulence there will impact the worldwide oil prices. and we have seen it with the european debt crisis. if our economic problems in europe, we have economic problems here. >> going back to the question, if you think about today it is not the middle east, but you have this same moderate and we hope, some moderate muslims. then you have the ruling elite who are very radical muslims. how can we support the moderates without changing the many as of their own people? it is a problem. it could b
energy supplies in the u.s., it won't change american foreign policy. we will be less dependent on oil from the middle east. concern is that china today gets 70% of its energy supplies from the middle east. india is about the same. europe as well. in the global economy is so interlinked that even if the u.s. is not dependent on middle eastern oil, i feel like the instability in the region where the chinese economy and the european economy. so, you know, i think we should step back and do less,...
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May 4, 2013
05/13
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there is a will, the energy, the community commitment and professional commitments and engage kids and mutual respect and trust call all the kids are here. people have come up to me all day today. i was doing the pizza party or hanging out with my girls, i got to know the teachers really well, the principal and i was over at middle school, people said thank you for writing the book. so it was a privilege to be here, a life changing experience to be here and in some small way i can take this kind of conversation not just here but in other communities across the country and maybe into those offices in washington as well then i will have paid back the care and hospitality i received when i was here so thank you very much. [applause] >> i dare not ask the question, it is appropriate we ask members of the audience, let me just remind you that this is being taped for c-span so if you have a question, don't ask it until the microphone is in your hand, please. i don't mean to scare anybody. over here. >> just a comment. i am a teacher at union city high and i am proud to teach here and i reall
there is a will, the energy, the community commitment and professional commitments and engage kids and mutual respect and trust call all the kids are here. people have come up to me all day today. i was doing the pizza party or hanging out with my girls, i got to know the teachers really well, the principal and i was over at middle school, people said thank you for writing the book. so it was a privilege to be here, a life changing experience to be here and in some small way i can take this...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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we had guys like william simon who'd been secretary of the treasury, secretary of energy, and jack had been the head of the general services administration and we were talking around the dinner table of one of our board dinners and they said a very simple question. if impact you go in and take a high level position in the new administration -- and they are talking from practical experience -- the first thing you have to do is now you have to get your spouse down here and your kids down here and you have to get them settled into new schools. you have to sell your old house and put all of your investments into the trust and you are worried about that on one side. in the meantime, you are going into your department and the only people you are hearing from are the people who are already there and obviously they have an interest in the status quo because they want to keep doing what they've been doing all along. so, all of a sudden you have been there for six months. you are the cheerleader for the ones that are supposed to be running and redirecting and it's business as usual. whether it i
we had guys like william simon who'd been secretary of the treasury, secretary of energy, and jack had been the head of the general services administration and we were talking around the dinner table of one of our board dinners and they said a very simple question. if impact you go in and take a high level position in the new administration -- and they are talking from practical experience -- the first thing you have to do is now you have to get your spouse down here and your kids down here and...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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they need energy, and, you know, their kidneys don't work anymore, so that blood product is helping them. but many people in that medical sector are also overweight, they're prone to heart attacks, and what happens with epo is it multiplies your red blood cells so much that your blood turns to sludge, and your heart can't pump it through your body. you have heart attacks, strokes, or like jim lennox, it just, you know, pours out of you in other ways. >> host: next call, john, salem, oregon. please go ahead. >> caller: i was very saddened to see what appears to me, kathleen, to be an overly simplistic and poorly researched presentation over the course of the past, i don't know, half hour or so i've been watching. i'm a neonaytologist. i have been so for 40 years, and the drug has been used particularly in preterm infants to reduce the incidence and need of blood transfusion and has been carefully used and has been also pound to be beneficial -- found to be beneficial in repair and regeneration of the central nervous system after it's been damaged. i think there are a number of very well-r
they need energy, and, you know, their kidneys don't work anymore, so that blood product is helping them. but many people in that medical sector are also overweight, they're prone to heart attacks, and what happens with epo is it multiplies your red blood cells so much that your blood turns to sludge, and your heart can't pump it through your body. you have heart attacks, strokes, or like jim lennox, it just, you know, pours out of you in other ways. >> host: next call, john, salem,...
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May 6, 2013
05/13
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early on when you have a chronic illness you have to make choices, you're not going to have the same energy or stamina so pick and choose what gets the best from you every day, and some things slide. i think it's the waxing and wapping that is actually more difficult because most people, fortunately, i hope, are never miserable every minute of every day, and it's like wince you get the taste of feeling better that's it's harder to adjust to falling down again, so other questions? yes? >> in what ways do you foresee medical facilities promoting the use of technology and improving the party experience in med sip overall? >> great question. that's about how the facilities utilizes technology and do you mean from a research stand point or from a social media? >> doctor-patient research, either way. >> i think there's a really good movement right now in collaborative care, and there's actually a rallying cry in the movement to have patient's help. i think there's an increased understanding of the need for collaboration so that the party is the best narrator of the symptoms, and you are seeing mo
early on when you have a chronic illness you have to make choices, you're not going to have the same energy or stamina so pick and choose what gets the best from you every day, and some things slide. i think it's the waxing and wapping that is actually more difficult because most people, fortunately, i hope, are never miserable every minute of every day, and it's like wince you get the taste of feeling better that's it's harder to adjust to falling down again, so other questions? yes? >>...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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there may be other features, energy efficiency for the fine print of a mortgage. and it won't work hard enough to put it there for people to notice. now i have 10 ideas for you and not go pretty quick. 10 proposals for greater simplification and each is set to be a little short story. number one americans don't save great for retirement. this is a problem for people who struggle when they get to retirement age. here's a chart that shows in the plan. it is easy to do that, but people.because why not do it tomorrow if you don't have to do it today and tomorrow never comes. people are automatically rolled. a study shows the effect of automatic enrollment increasing savings significantly higher than the effect of tax incentives and increasing savings. automatic enrollment doesn't cost a nickel. tax incentives cost a lot. the automatic enrollment policy jump savings more significantly than big tax incentives. there's a lesson about making things automatic can have big social benefits, even more so than taxpayer resources. they are the happy employees who are content wi
there may be other features, energy efficiency for the fine print of a mortgage. and it won't work hard enough to put it there for people to notice. now i have 10 ideas for you and not go pretty quick. 10 proposals for greater simplification and each is set to be a little short story. number one americans don't save great for retirement. this is a problem for people who struggle when they get to retirement age. here's a chart that shows in the plan. it is easy to do that, but people.because why...
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May 6, 2013
05/13
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. >> we try to choose books that are topical join him energy, that are either use a hot clinical topics or something that people in our community can relate to, immigration, economy, illegal immigration and right down to our last book. so we usually have a lot of response that way. >> we set up a website here, and every year women have a book selected we update it. here's the book, here's the topic of here's a link to the authors pages. here's what we are planning country. as was at the time and date and location we updated continuously. we promote the website on her homepage. the ultimate goal i would say is to just really get as many people to read the same book and then to come together and discuss it. one of the things that we've always talked about is how often have you read a really great book or an article, then you don't have anybody to talk to about it and you want to bounce ideas off each other. find out what other people thought about it. that's part of interesting when people ask questions and inevitably some people say you stole my question. i was going to ask that. so you
. >> we try to choose books that are topical join him energy, that are either use a hot clinical topics or something that people in our community can relate to, immigration, economy, illegal immigration and right down to our last book. so we usually have a lot of response that way. >> we set up a website here, and every year women have a book selected we update it. here's the book, here's the topic of here's a link to the authors pages. here's what we are planning country. as was at...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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agency and on more created after the second world war in the truman years, also includes the atomic energy commission. this new set of institutions gave us a second dice to a national state and into shorthand version, whereas the domestic interest group centered national state with the state pick with procedures, but in an ap or a sense interest, what democracy produced as democracy produces the affordable health care a comment that because the public interest. if democracy produced a repeal of the affordable health care act, that would be defined as the public interest. that is today. that's a democracy developed in the late 1940s. strong on procedures, but without a very strong accents in the public interest. the national security state we created was precisely the inverse of that. that is to say it was tasty with a strong sense of public interest. the united states in the globe was battling for, as a battle today for democracy, against dictatorships, against forms of anti-democratic zealotry. that's a powerful sense of galvanizing public interest. but it's also national state, relativel
agency and on more created after the second world war in the truman years, also includes the atomic energy commission. this new set of institutions gave us a second dice to a national state and into shorthand version, whereas the domestic interest group centered national state with the state pick with procedures, but in an ap or a sense interest, what democracy produced as democracy produces the affordable health care a comment that because the public interest. if democracy produced a repeal of...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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trade negotiation of a huge array of nontrade policies that affects our day-to-day lie lives, from energy to food safety to how expensive medicines are, how safe or roads are, to our jobs and investment policy, and land use policy in our domestic local communities. this form of domestic diplomatic legislating by the executive branch, and really international preemption of state rights, eye chronically happened to a very conservative -- under a very conservative president, who was very nervous about international agencies and the preemption of states rights. now, congress did in 1988 try to take back some of the turf, but it didn't change underlying structure of fast track. they added some new negotiating objectives but didn't take back any of the power, and a sort of trick to all this that has come out, whenever congress writes as objectives are totally ignored every time. so it turns out the fast track of nixon -- i'm sorry -- of '88 that was used for nafta and wto, required labor standards. people have been in the fights recently, know this is a controversial issue that was required in
trade negotiation of a huge array of nontrade policies that affects our day-to-day lie lives, from energy to food safety to how expensive medicines are, how safe or roads are, to our jobs and investment policy, and land use policy in our domestic local communities. this form of domestic diplomatic legislating by the executive branch, and really international preemption of state rights, eye chronically happened to a very conservative -- under a very conservative president, who was very nervous...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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that is about the feminine, feminine balancing out that while the warrior energy. and what they do is they throw him into a pot of water and boil it out. and you throw in another one. finally he just comes out steaming. and then he is back to normal. he goes into the castle and sits down at the foot of the king. that is where the warrior is. the warrior serves the king which is the body politic, the culture. and he gets there and he gets out of this wild, demonic stay by coming back to the feminine. of course and our culture that is carried by women obviously. that is what that meant is about. >> good afternoon. thank you for coming. my name is chris bentley. i just want to make a comment and then hear your reaction to that comment. then i have a question also. so the comment, being an unlisted guy and the marines, i have been on several taurus. i have seen some of the things, you know, you all talked about in combat, blood, killing to all that. and from my own personal experience, that is not the hardest thing to deal with. when you start feeling your heart rate g
that is about the feminine, feminine balancing out that while the warrior energy. and what they do is they throw him into a pot of water and boil it out. and you throw in another one. finally he just comes out steaming. and then he is back to normal. he goes into the castle and sits down at the foot of the king. that is where the warrior is. the warrior serves the king which is the body politic, the culture. and he gets there and he gets out of this wild, demonic stay by coming back to the...
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May 6, 2013
05/13
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especially for the oil energy needs. they are importing more than 60% of the oil energy from the region. they want to build more pipelines through iran from afghanistan. they are -- i think they already built or in the process of central asia pipeline. and they want more. terrorist true they are buying up farmland in africa. they need food. i find the question is, do they really want to take over. i find it you here. and it seems to me that your recommendation are counter intuitive to where many americans want to go. i don't think the region quite sees china playing the role either. the chinese continue want to play that. we provide security. they get the economic benefit. if we are going to lead and their interest are growing they, a bigger and bigger voice and influence and they the trend in that destruction is not just pipeline. there's a chinese investing in the middle east and they are investing in china. the consequence of decision come about decades from now. if we are saying to the region we're leaving. if we are
especially for the oil energy needs. they are importing more than 60% of the oil energy from the region. they want to build more pipelines through iran from afghanistan. they are -- i think they already built or in the process of central asia pipeline. and they want more. terrorist true they are buying up farmland in africa. they need food. i find the question is, do they really want to take over. i find it you here. and it seems to me that your recommendation are counter intuitive to where...
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May 4, 2013
05/13
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she was in her 70's by then and the prosecutors and all of their energies on this case trying to put them back into prison. c-span: where is cheryl today? >> guest: cheryl has made her life, too. sheryl is in boston. wonderfully enough, the prosecutor when she agreed that cheryl would not go back to prison, made her sign an unofficial, not a binding statement that she wouldn't appear -- ever appear on television. prosecutors are very under of that interview is being given by people who were released. c-span: how can you do that? how can you -- >> guest: well, there was a real question. boston peters said what is she afraid of? she allowed her -- she didn't want her speaking on television. when i came to florida, the day we knew that we could take grant snowden and to freedom after the 11 years he was not going to serve his life term but he did spend 11 years in this rathole prison in florida, the prosecutor who was by then - and broken had only one pleaded the judge. your honor, we would just ask that mr. snowden not talk to the television interviews and the media, and the judge said
she was in her 70's by then and the prosecutors and all of their energies on this case trying to put them back into prison. c-span: where is cheryl today? >> guest: cheryl has made her life, too. sheryl is in boston. wonderfully enough, the prosecutor when she agreed that cheryl would not go back to prison, made her sign an unofficial, not a binding statement that she wouldn't appear -- ever appear on television. prosecutors are very under of that interview is being given by people who...